Motorola was founded in Chicago, Illinois in 1928. With just $565 to their name, brothers Paul and Joseph Galvin purchased business plans from a bankrupt tech company, rented out a tiny corner of an office building, and hired just five employees to embark on what would soon become Motorola, Inc.

The company’s first products were battery eliminators, devices that hooked up battery-powered radios to household electricity. But radio technology soon advanced, and, like all technology does at some point, battery eliminators became obsolete. However, Paul Galvin already had his eye on the next target: car radios. He enlisted his engineers to invent a radio receiver that could be embedded in most vehicles for a reasonable price. They were successful, and Galvin was able to sell enough orders to keep Motorola in business.

The Motorola DynaTAC 8000X was the first commercially available mobile phone, released in 1984. Source: Wikipedia

It wasn’t until sixty years later, in 1983, that Motorola manufactured the world’s first commercial cell phone. In 2004, they transformed the mobile phone game with the brightly colored Razr flip phone. In 2011, the Motorola Droid Bionic became the most repairable smartphone we’d ever disassembled, scoring a 9 out of 10 on our repairability scale. And today, Motorola continues their dedication to putting consumers first—they’re the first smartphone manufacturer ever to supply OEM parts to iFixit.

Like Motorola, iFixit started out small. Our founders, college roommates Kyle Wiens and Luke Soules, opened iFixit out of their dorm room in 2003 when they couldn’t find a repair manual for Kyle’s broken laptop. And even as we’ve expanded to supply replacement parts and tools to consumers and repair businesses around the world, we’ve made the conscious choice to stay small.

Some folks mistake our size and mission for meaning that we don’t want to work with larger manufacturers. That’s not true. In fact, most manufacturers don’t want to work with us. But not Motorola—they’re the first major smartphone manufacturer to partner with iFixit. And they’re a pioneer of the mobile phone and serve tens of millions of customers around the world, to boot.

For fixers like us, this partnership is representative of a broader movement in support of our Right to Repair. It’s proof that OEM manufacturers and independent repair can co-exist. Big business and social responsibility, and innovation and sustainability, don’t need to be mutually exclusive. We feel Motorola is setting an industry-leading example of a company that’s looking forward—not just six months ahead to next quarter’s margins, but decades ahead when devices are damned for the landfill.

And the landfill is where many devices end up in a manufacturer-dominated repair market: E-waste is a 50 million ton global problem. The batteries smartphone-makers are stubbornly gluing into their phones contributed to 40 percent of the past two years’ e-waste recycling fires in California. We simply don’t have time to carry on with this throwaway culture.

Like the Galvin brothers’ battery-eliminators, no tech lives forever. But we can make sure it lives longer. And that’s exactly what Motorola is doing. By giving consumers easier access to parts, people are better equipped to fix their broken devices—and more fixing means less e-waste.

It’s official—Motorola is the first major smartphone manufacturer to supply OEM parts to iFixit. Pictured: Moto Z Play.

We can’t fix the system alone. We need our community of fixers to spread the word online and in their local communities. We need legislators to make fair repair laws that hold manufacturers responsible. And most of all, we need manufacturers to make integral changes to their business models to put people and the planet before profit.

We believe Motorola is setting an example for major manufacturers to embrace a more open attitude towards repair. If you’re a Motorola customer, you can now either send in your broken device directly to Motorola for repair—or you can fix it yourself with the highest quality parts and tools, plus a free step-by-step guide, all included in our Fix Kits.

24 Comments on “Motorola and iFixit—A Match Made in Mobile”

So, I’ve been looking at my 3-year-old iPhone considering when it will be time to upgrade. I look at the new iPhones and realize Apple is really selling fancy unrepairable cameras…with a phone attached. (Watch the keynotes: it’s all about the cameras.)

After a few years keeping our iDevices running with heat guns, iFixit warmers, odd fiddly screwdrivers and that annoying white battery tape I’ve become disenchanted with the no-repair mentality at Apple. iPhone screens break so often I can take one apart and put it back together without looking on iFixit (and this is *not* what I do for a living).

And now, Motorola, who made my very first cell phone (2950 SE) and my second-all-time favorite cell phone (the Razr – behind the Nokia 8210) is embracing a repairable future.

The move from the Apple ecosystem (jail?) to Android is disconcerting but I’m not sure the concerns are insurmountable. In the next few weeks I know I’ll be (1) reviewing the teardowns of Moto phones on iFixit and (2) visiting my Verizon store. If I can just get a Moto without all the crappy bloatware I might be able to make the jump.

Hey, this is great that iFixit and Moto are working together ! I’ve been a member of iFixit for a long time, and also have worked for Moto for a long time (!) so I’m really happy to see this partnership – I hope it works out well.

Just a slight correction to the story line, though – Motorola started out in Chicago, not Schaumburg – Moto moved to Schaumburg in the mid 1970’s. Schaumburg didn’t even exist until the 50’s ! See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorola for a full history if you are interested !

@craig, the beauty of Moto phones is a lack of bloatware and beat stock Android with Moto actions, which are a great feature that pixel, and other Android phones are trying to emulate. I just replaced by Moto x 2014 with a new LG v40.

I’m trying to add the flashlight chop and phone twist to my new v40. The battery on my Moto x 2014 was failing and not easily replaced. I’ll have to look and see if there’s a kit for my Moto.

I was late in getting into smart phones but my first was a Droid I’ve been a Motorola guy ever since I currently have a g6 play I was wondering if there is a software patch to make my phone able to WiFi call over at and t network also is there a way to download a photo gallery ?

It is a good start. Why don’t Motorola Mobility returns to the “interchangeable battery” design that used to be common on all older cellphones? The Motorola G4 Plus, even has a back lid, you have to remove the screws, remove tape and disconnect cables to replace the battery.

Being that I have been an iFixit customer and have fixed some iPhones with their parts and instructions. As a fan of Android and recent owner of a new Android one Moto X4 this is awesome news. I think devices should be more repairable and manufacturers should not use tactics like Apple to make more for them. I will always be more supportive of companies that make products that can be fixed instead of expensive disposable ones.